Internet for tenants

Anyone out there providing internet for their tenants and has figured out how to avoid liability from the Copyright Amendment Bill? There is an article about this in the January NZ Property Investors Mag but it doesn't come up with a solution apart from "Don't do it"! Options I can think of are:
- Using a 3rd party or software that tracks usage and hence identifies any tenant breaching the act
- Including clauses in the tenancy agreement that the tenant will not breach the act, etc.

Why can't you provide a means for them to have their own accounts instead of providing the account yourself?

Internet is offered as a value add, and the target market is young professionals and students and tenancies are room by room and often less than 12 months (which is typically the minimum term for an internet contract). Not enough rooms to make something like Freedom Internet's service economic.

Can't you just write a contract stating "The tenant indemnifies the Landlord against any and all internet activities..."
or such B.S. legal drivel that all other businesses use?

The problem is not between landlord and tenant but landlord and internet service provider. The skynet law holds the account holder responsible. Even if the breach of copyright can be tracked to the tenant, the landlord is the account holder and the one getting the warnings and potential fine.

Common sense does not prevail with the stupid skynet law. The landlord would be guilty and the proof is the issued warning.

Yes, it is. Providing any internet services is not problematic. There are solutions which internet cafes use to prevent peer to peer copying but are a bit over the top for landlords and perhaps a little too restrictive for many internet users.